Hey TeaChat! I'm relatively new to teas so I had a few questions. I was wondering if you guys could tell me the absolute best quality pu-erh (in terms of the calm and clear buzz you all call "cha qi" I think it is!) for under $35.

I'll be posting 2 sites because there's so many tea sites out there I'm just sticking to two so I don't get overwhelmed with choices.

Here are the two sites to choose from. www.PuerhShop.com and www.TeaVivre.com.

Thank you all as I'm having a hard time picking the best quality pu-erh with how many there are out there.

Best is a very subjective thing. I haven't ordered from those sites and can't give you any specific recommendations, but to help those who have, can you be more specific about what you're looking for: sheng (raw) or shu (ripe)? Do you prefer it earthy smoky sweet spicy bitter astringent ?

debunix wrote:Best is a very subjective thing. I haven't ordered from those sites and can't give you any specific recommendations, but to help those who have, can you be more specific about what you're looking for: sheng (raw) or shu (ripe)? Do you prefer it earthy smoky sweet spicy bitter astringent ?

I honestly am not too sure about that. I'm brand new to the tea world and I've heard very good things about pu-erh so I'm trying to find one that is the best I can get on a very tiny budget of around $35-40.

I guess I'm open to either both as I'm not sure what distinguishing features differentiate between raw or ripe.

I'm sorry for all of the questions and the naivety, but I'm just venturing into this wonderful world of tea.

This is quite an impossible question to answer. It depends so much on your taste. In Terms of Sheng - while there are some who like young Sheng, i don't. So i buy cakes of young Sheng, many in your price range, i store them for about ten years before i drink them, because i do not like young Sheng Pu Erh, i love aged Sheng.I would look at another Shop as well - Yunnansourcing, run by Scott, an American who lives in Yunnan. He has a huge range of teas, and also produces his own cakes.

A Sheng that is not bad at all (i have 3 cakes), and is already quite drinkable, but slightly over your price range, i can definitely recommend:

I concur with the above posts. But if you want something a bit representative of pu with some age, a sample of this might not be a bad way to go:from Yunnan Sourcing, 2002 Yi Wu Ancient spirit.http://www.yunnansourcing.com/store/product.php?id_product=1994The cake is $43. A bit above your goal, but worth the extra $10.

BioHorn wrote:I concur with the above posts. But if you want something a bit representative of pu with some age, a sample of this might not be a bad way to go:from Yunnan Sourcing, 2002 Yi Wu Ancient spirit.http://www.yunnansourcing.com/store/product.php?id_product=1994The cake is $43. A bit above your goal, but worth the extra $10.

I haven't been drinking puerh very long, but the best advice I received was to sample.

Buy your budget's worth of samples, don't buy one cake. Why do you even want an entire cake? You'll learn so much more by spreading out your money over as many samples as you can buy. Get some young sheng, older sheng and old sheng. I would say try some shu too.

How can you know what you might like if you limit yourself to one single cake? Plus, there's a serious chance you won't like it ... now you have over 300 grams a tea that you don't like, and what did you learn? Only that you don't like that single particular puerh. If you sample, you'll learn so much more.

tst wrote:I haven't been drinking puerh very long, but the best advice I received was to sample.

Buy your budget's worth of samples, don't buy one cake. Why do you even want an entire cake? You'll learn so much more by spreading out your money over as many samples as you can buy. Get some young sheng, older sheng and old sheng. I would say try some shu too.

How can you know what you might like if you limit yourself to one single cake? Plus, there's a serious chance you won't like it ... now you have over 300 grams a tea that you don't like, and what did you learn? Only that you don't like that single particular puerh. If you sample, you'll learn so much more.

Just my opinion.

As a relative noob myself, I have to say tst's advice is the best you're going to get. You could combine his with red's and buy samples of the cakes he's recommending to you, as well as a few others to see what floats your boat. Only you know what you like, so buying lots of small samples is the way to go.

BioHorn wrote:I concur with the above posts. But if you want something a bit representative of pu with some age, a sample of this might not be a bad way to go:from Yunnan Sourcing, 2002 Yi Wu Ancient spirit.http://www.yunnansourcing.com/store/product.php?id_product=1994The cake is $43. A bit above your goal, but worth the extra $10.

If your in the u.s. I would order samples from yunnan sourcing us site. I would try a few sheng samples of there house brand and a sample or two of menghai shu that is at least a few years old. I would try a bunch of samples rather than comiting to a whole cake of anything right off the jump.

Get a decent practice cake. The thing about puerh is that sessions can vary much more than other kinds of tea. Getting to know one cake well, means getting to know with precision, if not accuracy, what you want out of a puerh. So I say, get one cake, try a 250g or 100g cake! And buy a bunch of samples to go with it.

Get a decent practice cake. The thing about puerh is that sessions can vary much more than other kinds of tea. Getting to know one cake well, means getting to know with precision, if not accuracy, what you want out of a puerh. So I say, get one cake, try a 250g or 100g cake! And buy a bunch of samples to go with it.